The Follower

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Overview

With each meaningless date and disappointing new boyfriend, Katie Porter is becoming more and more disillusioned. No matter how wide a net she casts she can’t seem to find a guy who really understands her. But someone thinks she’s special—very special. And he’s watching her...

Peter sees Katie at the gym. He sees her at the coffee bar she stops at on the way to work. In fact, he sees her almost everywhere, as he quietly trails her. But most of all, he sees her in his plans for ...

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2008 Mass-market paperback New. No dust jacket as issued. Mass market (rack) paperback. Glued binding. 371 p. Audience: General/trade.

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Overview

With each meaningless date and disappointing new boyfriend, Katie Porter is becoming more and more disillusioned. No matter how wide a net she casts she can’t seem to find a guy who really understands her. But someone thinks she’s special—very special. And he’s watching her...

Peter sees Katie at the gym. He sees her at the coffee bar she stops at on the way to work. In fact, he sees her almost everywhere, as he quietly trails her. But most of all, he sees her in his plans for the future. He’s got the proposal worked out, he’s even got the ring and their happy home already bought. After all, he’s had enough time to plan things to perfection—he grew up in the same small town. Surely, after all these years, he can’t let anything stand in his way…

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Editorial Reviews

Publishers Weekly

Murder stalks a love triangle in New York City in Starr's low-key thriller, his most crowd-pleasing novel to date. Katie Porter believes her encounter at the health club with Peter Wells is total chance. What she doesn't know is that Peter once dated her sister back in her hometown and has elaborate plans to marry her, after waiting a couple of weeks for the perfect romantic moment to pop the question. And she doesn't have a clue that her current boyfriend, Andy Barnett, is ready to dump her. A "twenty-three-year-old single guy in Manhattan," Andy is a male animal on the prowl, checking out all the action: "The clothes were loose, but it looked like she had a nice body-thin anyway, which was all that really mattered." Starr (Lights Out) is a master at capturing the minute-by-minute lives of vacuous yuppies, and he absolutely shines with these characters. When Peter decides he needs to eliminate the competition, this Looking for Ms. Goodbarsuddenly becomes a very funny, dark social satire. (Aug.)

Copyright 2007 Reed Business Information
Library Journal

New York's Upper East Side can be a great place to live for twentysomething singles-unless you meet that certain someone who turns out to be a psychotic stalker. Starr's (Lights Out) latest is a departure from his previous novels in several ways. First, it features a female heroine, Katie Porter, who has moved to the city to make a life for herself away from the Massachusetts suburbs and her inattentive parents. Her search for Mr. Right is complicated by the appearance of Peter Wells, a familiar face from her former small-town life. Peter's sudden interest is a relief to Katie, but his attentions soon turn her life upside down. The story also represents a change for Starr in terms of style and genre. Where his early novels were straight-ahead noir-crime, this is more of a character-driven thriller, exploring the relationships between men and women in a world of urban disillusionment. Luckily, Starr's trademark dark humor and sharp dialog remain in force. Recommended for most fiction collections [See Prepub Mystery, LJ4/1/07.]
—Ken Bolton

Kirkus Reviews
Starr's latest walk on the sour side stakes out his heroine between an insensitive lout and a murderous sociopath. Katie Porter isn't much of a heroine. She worries too much about her weight, is basically clueless about the New York types she dates and hasn't had much of a relationship with her parents ever since her college-freshman sister Heather jumped off a roof. But Katie surely deserves better than the two guys competing for her favors. Andy Barnett, a junior investment analyst with the soul of a frat boy, thinks of nothing but getting laid and impressing his porn-fixated roommates, and he has no more interest in reading Katie's emotions than in learning Sanskrit. But the real danger is Peter Wells, a stalker who's taken a job at the Metro Sports Club just so that he'll have a plausible excuse to meet the woman he's determined to marry. In the first, and funnier, half of this oxygen-deprived idyll, Peter plots to win Katie's affections, misjudging her actual feelings. Once Peter crosses the line to murder, Starr, true to form, turns the case over first to a loser cop with a terrible clearance rate, then to a preening narcissist who won't listen to anybody. As in his first seven novels (Lights Out, 2006, etc.), Starr updates the noir playbook by making every single character as unappealing as last night's cigarette smoke.
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Product Details

  • ISBN-13: 9780312944919
  • Publisher: St. Martin's Press
  • Publication date: 12/2/2008
  • Format: Mass Market Paperback
  • Edition description: Reprint
  • Pages: 384
  • Product dimensions: 6.82 (w) x 4.18 (h) x 1.03 (d)

Meet the Author

JASON STARR is the multi-award-winning author of seven previous books, including Lights Out (available from St. Martin’s Paperbacks). He was born and raised in Brooklyn and now lives in Manhattan.

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Read an Excerpt

The Follower


By Starr, Jason

St. Martin's Minotaur

Copyright © 2007 Starr, Jason
All right reserved.

ISBN: 9780312359744

Chapter One Peter Wells had never been turned down for a job. He didn’t have to work very often, thank God, but when he needed work—and he desperately needed the receptionist job at the Metro Sports Club—he always got hired. The interviewer, a musclehead named Jimmy, seemed like an asshole from the get-go. He told Peter to wait in his office because he was “in the middle of something.” Meanwhile, Peter watched through the Plexiglas as Jimmy hung out by the front desk with another musclehead, the two of them hitting on practically every girl who passed by. Finally, maybe twenty minutes later, Jimmy came into the office and said, “Sorry about that, buddy, it’s been crazy here today,” and sat at his desk. “No, problem, man,” Peter said, talking the way Jimmy talked, knowing it was a way to instantly connect with an employer. Jimmy squinted at the résumé for several seconds, and then started looking at Peter’s left ear. That was what Peter thought anyway; then he turned and saw what Jimmy was staring at—the skinny dark-haired girl in black bicycle shorts who was bending over doing a hamstring stretch. “Gotta love Nikki,” Jimmy said. “Comes here two times a day—usesmachines, does cardio, must spend an hour on the Stairmaster. Phenomenal body but, honestly, she’s only average at this place. People say the best-looking girls are in the Village and the Meatpacking District, but I’ll take the Upper East Side chicks any day. Watch the advanced step classes sometime. I mean, yeah, you got some girls who need to lose some poundage, but most of them are total babes.
They all starve themselves, that’s why. They eat salad and Tasti-Delight for dinner every night, then come here to work off the calories. But, trust me, these chicks could be eighty-five pounds and you’d still wanna fuck ’em.” Peter knew Jimmy would be an absolute nightmare to work for, but keeping the act going he said, “Yeah, she’s hot all right.” Jimmy, looking at the résumé again, said, “So let’s see. You worked at Body Image in Santa Monica?” “That’s right,” Peter said. “How’d that go?” “It went well. It went really well. But then they closed down so I had to leave.” Actually, Peter had never worked at a health club in Santa Monica. He’d never even been there. “And you worked in Mexico?” Jimmy asked. “Yeah,” Peter said, “I was traveling a little bit, trying to figure out what to do, you know? I taught ESL.” Another lie, although he’d lived in Mexico for a while. “At L’Escuela International de Guadalajara?” Jimmy asked. “Hablas español?” Peter said. “What?” Jimmy waited, then laughed and said, “Just kidding, man. I took it in high school and my dad’s half Puerto Rican, but I can’t talk for shit. But that’s good—you’re bilingual. You should talk to Carlos, trainer works on weekends . . . So you got any more gym experience?” “Sure have,” Peter lied. “In college, I worked in the weight room a couple semesters. Volunteered.” Peter hadn’t gone to college, but he doubted Jimmy would start checking references. “Let’s see,” Jimmy said. “BA in English at the University of Colorado at Boulder. Looks like you’ve been all over, huh? Where’d you grow up?” “Massachusetts.” “Boston?” “Lenox.” “Oh, that’s why I didn’t hear a Bahston accent.” Jimmy laughed. “So you say you want to be a trainer, huh?” “That’s my goal,” Peter said, although he didn’t care what he did at the gym. He was planning to work there for a couple of weeks, tops, but he knew he had to show ambition. “Well, this is a good place to work when you’re going for your license,” Jimmy said. “We’re flexible if you wanna go to school, take classes, whatever. We don’t give benefits for part-time, but a lot of people who work here start part-time and work their way up to full. But all I’ve got for you right now is a part-time desk job.
You make sure people scan their cards when they come in, hand out towels, answer the phones . . .” “That sounds good to me,” Peter said. “It only pays nine-fifty an hour.” “Money doesn’t matter.” Jimmy looked up, surprised. Peter wished he could take that back. “I mean, it matters,” Peter said. “Of course it matters. I just mean I want to work here to get some more health club experience under my belt so I can become a trainer someday. So it doesn’t really matter what I make right now.” “I got ya, I got ya,” Jimmy said. “Well, it looks like you’ve got the credentials and you’re a good guy—if you want the job it’s yours, man.” “I definitely want it.” “Great. I can only give you part-time—morning shift, six to noon—and you gotta work weekends. I can get you extra hours here and there, but I can’t get you benefits and I’m gonna have to ten ninety-nine you.” “That’s fine.” “You can work out whenever you want and I’ll introduce you to the trainers—Scott, Mike, Carlos, Jenny. Man, wait till you see Jenny.” Trying not to roll his eyes, Peter said, “A babe, huh?” “Fucking smoking,” Jimmy said. “When can you start?” “How about tomorrow?” “Tomorrow works. Welcome aboard, my man.” Jimmy and Peter shook hands. As they left the office and headed along the corridor toward the front of the gym, Jimmy said, “So where do you live?” “Right around the corner,” Peter said, “with my girlfriend.” “Yeah?” Jimmy said. “Yeah, maybe you know her. Katie. Katie Porter?” “She’s tall, blond, nice shape?” “Actually she has light brown hair and she’s about five three. But, yeah, she has a nice shape.” “Nah, I’m confusing her,” Jimmy said, “but if she works out here I’m sure I’ve seen her around. But that’s cool—that’s real cool.
You got a girlfriend belongs to the gym, you’re living close by. So how’d you guys meet?” “We grew up together.” “High school sweethearts, huh?” “Yeah, kind of.” The musclehead Jimmy had been hanging out with before was walking by in the other direction. “Hey, Mike,” Jimmy said to the guy. “This is Peter Wells. He’s gonna be working at the front desk and he wants to be a trainer.” “Great,” Mike said and shook Peter’s hand with a very firm grip. “See you around, man.” “Yeah, you, too.” Peter and Jimmy stopped near the entrance to the gym. “I gotta hit the weights, man,” Jimmy said. “When you come in tomorrow you can find me in the office and we’ll take care of the paperwork and all that bullshit then. Sound cool?” “Sounds cool.” “Hey, and you gotta introduce me to your girlfriend sometime.” “I definitely will.” Jimmy went back toward the locker room. Peter was proud of himself. He’d hung in there, said all the right things, and he’d gotten the job. It was only a first step, but so far everything was going according to plan. As he zipped his windbreaker, he scanned the main level of the gym. Dozens of overworked-looking twentysomethings were listening to iPods or watching TV while they worked out on the Stairmasters and treadmills. Peter hadn’t seen Katie when he arrived for the interview, and he didn’t see her now, either. He exited the health club and headed downtown along Third Avenue, walking fast with his hands in his pockets. Copyright © 2007 by Jason Starr. All rights reserved. 
 

Continues...

Excerpted from The Follower by Starr, Jason Copyright © 2007 by Starr, Jason. Excerpted by permission.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

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Customer Reviews

Average Rating 3.5
( 3 )
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Sort by: Showing all of 3 Customer Reviews
  • Anonymous

    Posted September 13, 2008

    A dark and entertaining read

    As a chick lit author, I love any book that begins with a Jane Austen quote. Especially one that¿s cleverly used, as in the opener to Jason Starr¿s psychological thriller, THE FOLLOWER. THE FOLLOWER is a dark tale about Katie Porter, and the man who stalks her, Peter Wells. Just one warning: Parents¿you may never let your children move into their own apartment in Manhattan after you read this! Starr does an excellent job of portraying single life amongst the 20-somethings living on the Upper East Side of Manhattan¿and then skewering it. I loved the irony of how Katie¿s creepy stalker, Peter, actually has many of the things that Katie would want in a man¿the expensive co- op apartment, the big bank account, and the subtle good looks. Starr is making a powerful statement about single life in New York City, what we think we want, and what we deserve to get. I was highly entertained by this book, and you will be, too. It was the first Jason Starr novel that I¿ve ever read, and I will be back to read more.

    1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.

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  • Posted December 9, 2008

    more from this reviewer

    dark urban suspense thriller

    In New York City, Katie Porter is tired of being a swinging single as any male she dates seems to be a loser. Her current boyfriend Andy Barnett believes in partying all night while ignoring her needs beyond the physical he begs her to please go all the way for his satisfaction even as he plans to dump her. --- However, Peter Wells thinks Katie is the special woman for him. He watches her working out at the gym observes her stopping for coffee on her way to work and sees her everywhere she goes as he serendipitously follows her. Peter has plans for the love of his life to make her his wife having bought the marriage ring and their house. He takes the first steps by saying hello at the health club, which affirms his belief that she is the one for him. He has known since childhood when they grew up together and more so when he dated her sister unbeknownst to Katie. Nothing will stand between him and his woman not even randy Andy boyfriend. --- This is a dark satirical look at the lifestyle of Manhattan¿s swinging singles. Katie is a fascinating protagonist as she wants a boyfriend who cares about her Andy cannot resist the island¿s horde of beautiful available women as he wants all of them Peter is obsessed as he wants Katie even if it means eliminating his perceived competition. Though purposely somewhat stereotyped to the point of dark lampooning of the disenchanted, fans of urban suspense thrillers will appreciate this romantic triangle in which death may prove the only solution. --- Harriet Klausner

    1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted January 30, 2013

    To3

    Dont talkan


    Ggvvfghjklkk

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